So what's the solution? Where will the electricity come from?
Coal/gas? - Too Polluting
Nuclear? - Bloody expensive
Hydro Electric - fine but locations are very limited.
Those dead birds at the bottom of the page was a bit gruesome. Is there actual data that birds die any more than flying into houses and sky scrapers?

Looking at map doesn't look like it'll be near rannoch moor. Its north of rannoch loch and east of loch ericht. Which is the middle of nowhere in amoungst some peaks. If they do it right I'd guess it could be fairly hidden.

If you have ever been up Ben Alder or any of the nearby hills or ridden the classic Ben Alder loop you would realise that it is a pretty amazing area with little sign of human intrusion, short of the bothy at Ben Alder cottage and the path. It takes a few hours to get there by bike and probably a day by walking if you start from east, west or north. There are no turbines visible anywhere near it just now. It is not a good place for a wind farm. There is also no centre of population nearby to use the power. Why not stick them on the south downs and they can power London without cables the length of the country?

So what signs of human intrusion are there then? Once you're over the bealachs heading west past Ben Alder there's basically nothing bar a couple of small forests and you don't really see them much of the time. Was through there at Easter and just looked back through pictures. If you come in from the south there is a bit more granted but it is out of sight from Loch Ericht.

The point is if you keep putting them where there is little development very quickly there is no where left that has been not been developed and it is a lot harder to go back from that. SNH includes this area in it's core wild land map and I fully agree with that.

To me it is a bit different, yes it would be great if it was all natural forest or whatever was there at whatever random point in history suits you for that argument but currently there is water and plants and mountains, all stuff that is not obviously man made for about as far as you can see. The forests are not always visible but 400 foot turbine would be. So while I understand your point I don't agree with it. You might as well cover all the highlands in turbines and be done with it in that case.

Somebody else's back yard yes, where there is obvious development all around and a huge market for the power within eyesight. Why change areas that are a natural as is possible now in the UK when there are plenty that are near the population centres and already covered in roads, houses pylons etc

iolo » Those dead birds at the bottom of the page was a bit gruesome. Is there actual data that birds die any more than flying into houses and sky scrapers?

Or are killed by cats?

Estimates of how many creatures are killed by cats each year vary significantly.
The most recent figures are from the Mammal Society, which estimates that the UK's cats catch up to 275 million prey items a year, of which 55 million are birds. This is the number of prey items that were known to have been caught; we don't know how many more the cats caught, but didn't bring home, or how many escaped but subsequently died.

To me it is a bit different, yes it would be great if it was all natural forest

I thought the current wisdom is that most of the deforestation there is natural? Warming causing the original forests to die off, then the short cold wet spell damaging the land enough to prevent easy return?

I have a real hatred of wind farms. Not only are they ugly and ineffective but also a scam - cut the subsidies and see how many schemes move forward. We seem to be inudated with them around here s/mid wales - they create no local jobs and our gov't has no say over the larger schemes which are imposed by the Westminster Gov't- I wouldn't mind if say they were built here or serviced and maintained here or I could hold our gov't to account. The Melincourt wind farm (the one now at Afan)is serviced from Germany or Denmark. A few wind farms in the Chilterns, South Downs on the Malvern Hills? HS2 and the world is going to end!

I posted this as I think we need to get fussy about the little wild land we have.

I am aware that the term wild is relative. The whole of that Valley is man affected - forests cleared and Loch Eric is artificially flooded, and the current and ruined roads and buildings. However, it is almost as good as it gets in the UK, and the solitude up there still impacts those of us fortunate enough to visit.
The thought that we could put in such massive structures, that would be visible from all sorts of places (see Muriel Gray's comments about seeing Shiehallion from every other top) is just beyond me.

For those asking about my power use and preference for generation - I live in the shadow of the braes of Doune wind farm. I think it is great - on the edge of a town, near a main road, next to grid tie etc.
What iI want is us all to use less, much less, and throw money at house insulation and efficiencies.